Arctic / Antarctic / Alpine

Surface Microbial Diversity at the Detection Limit within the Vicinity of the Concordia Station, Antarctica

By Keith Cowing
Press Release
February 8, 2023
Filed under , , , ,
Surface Microbial Diversity at the Detection Limit within the Vicinity of the Concordia Station, Antarctica
Concordia Research Station and sampling sites. (A) Map of Antarctica showing the Concordia Research Station at Dome C (B); sampling site L1 at 10 m (C); sampling site L2 at 500 m (D); and sampling site L3 at 1000 m (E). (A–E) photo credit: European Space Agency.

The Concordia Research Station provides a unique location for preparatory activities for future human journey to Mars, to explore microbial diversity at subzero temperatures, and monitor the dissemination of human-associated microorganisms within the pristine surrounding environment.

Snow Surface Microbial Diversity at the Detection Limit within the Vicinity of the Concordia Station, Antarctica

The Concordia Research Station provides a unique location for preparatory activities for future human journey to Mars, to explore microbial diversity at subzero temperatures, and monitor the dissemination of human-associated microorganisms within the pristine surrounding environment.

Amplicon sequencing was leveraged to investigate the microbial diversity of surface snow samples collected monthly over a two-year period, at three distances from the Station (10, 500, and 1000 m).

Even when the extracted total DNA was below the detection limit, 16S rRNA gene sequencing was successfully performed on all samples, while 18S rRNA was amplified on 19 samples out of 51. No significant relationships were observed between microbial diversity and seasonality (summer or winter) or distance from the Concordia base.

This suggested that if present, the anthropogenic impact should have been below the detectable limit. While harboring low microbial diversity, the surface snow samples were characterized by heterogeneous microbiomes.

Ultimately, our study corroborated the use of DNA sequencing-based techniques for revealing microbial presence in remote and hostile environments, with implications for Planetary Protection during space missions and for life-detection in astrobiology relevant targets.

by Alessandro Napoli, Claudia Coleine, Nikea J. Ulrich, Ralf Moeller, Daniela Billi , and Laura Selbmann

Snow Surface Microbial Diversity at the Detection Limit within the Vicinity of the Concordia Station, Antarctica, Life (open access)
Astrobiology

Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA Space Station Payload manager/space biologist, Away Teams, Journalist, Lapsed climber, Synaesthete, Na’Vi-Jedi-Freman-Buddhist-mix, ASL, Devon Island and Everest Base Camp veteran, (he/him) 🖖🏻